Generation and Evolution of High-Mach Number, Laser-Driven Magnetized Collisionless Shocks in the Laboratory
Derek Schaeffer, Will Fox, Dan Haberberger, Gennady Fiksel, Amitava, Bhattacharjee, Daniel Barnak, Suxing Hu, and Kai Germaschewski

TL;DR
This paper reports the first laboratory creation of high-Mach number, magnetized collisionless shocks using laser-driven plasma interactions, providing a new platform for studying shock physics and particle acceleration.
Contribution
It introduces a novel experimental setup that generates high-Mach number collisionless shocks in the laboratory, validated by imaging and simulations, advancing shock physics research.
Findings
Formation of supercritical shocks at Mach number ~12 observed
Detailed shock structure and ion reflection dynamics characterized
Experimental results supported by particle-in-cell simulations
Abstract
Shocks act to convert incoming supersonic flows to heat, and in collisionless plasmas the shock layer forms on kinetic plasma scales through collective electromagnetic effects. These collisionless shocks have been observed in many space and astrophysical systems [Smith 1975, Smith 1980, Burlaga 2008, Sulaiman 2015], and are believed to accelerate particles, including cosmic rays, to extremely high energies [Kazanas 1986, Loeb 2000, Bamba 2003, Masters 2013, Ackermann 2013]. Of particular importance are the class of high-Mach number, supercritical shocks [Balogh 2013] (), which must reflect significant numbers of particles back into the upstream to accommodate entropy production, and in doing so seed proposed particle acceleration mechanisms [Blandford 1978, McClements 2001, Caprioli 2014, Matsumoto 2015]. Here we present the first laboratory generation of high-Mach number…
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